Senior Political Reporter
Legislation to regulate social media for children under age 12 will be among Government’s legislative agenda for the Second Session of Parliament—and Government also projects offering approximately 8,000-plus jobs ahead via its Housing and Revitalisation projects.
Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar announced this in a statement to the House of Representatives on Government’s plans for the Second Session of the term, which was launched yesterday.
“As we begin this new session, I want to assure the people of T&T that I hear you, I see you, and I remain attuned to the realities facing our nation every day. We’re focused, determined and fully committed to getting the work done to improve your lives,” the PM added.
Persad-Bissessar said the First Session achieved what was “perhaps a record level of success” in delivering a legislative agenda —laying 33 bills, 28 of which were passed. She detailed 18 bills.
Persad-Bissessar said in this new session, the promised bill to make private pensions tax-free would have been laid in Parliament yesterday. Government also plans to advance legislation for, among other things, the following:
• A medical malpractice court
• A no-fault compensation system
• ↓Regulatory frameworks for cannabis and agricultural diversification
• ↓Amendments to modernise the Education Act
• ↓Development of a Parental Responsibility framework to address school violence
• ↓Increases in the age limits for use of ganja, alcohol and gambling
• The Victims’ Rights Act
• Chancellor for the Judiciary
• Amendments to the Firearms Act
• ↓Law regarding gated communities
• ↓Local government reform of construction and building approvals
Legislative and administrative reforms for Tobago include addressing long-standing anomalies in the Tobago House of Assembly Act.
Government is also exploring the establishment of a Tobago Local Police Service, is reforming the alien landholding licensing system to better serve Tobagonians and also tackling the long-standing issue of land tenure, the PM added.
On security, the Prime Minister accused the previous People’s National Movement government of allowing T&T to “descend into a criminal narco state.”
When the United National Congress assumed office, she said, “The local drug mafia was earning supernormal revenue from trafficking illegal drugs, humans and weapons and organised criminal networks had eroded public confidence and placed entire communities under increasing threat.”
“My Government is doing what is necessary, and we will continue to be guided by the National Security Council’s advice on the way forward,” she added.
Thus far in 2026, serious crimes have dropped by 30 per cent compared to the same period last year, 2025, she noted.
Kamla: More jobs coming
Persad-Bissessar said official Central Statistical Office data shows that approximately 8,000 jobs were created in the final quarter of 2025, while youth unemployment fell from 12.2 per cent to 7.7 per cent.
“Between April 2025 and April 2026, across 18 ministries, Government has already delivered 14,080 jobs. As we move forward, our new proposed housing project will create over 4,000 additional jobs, and the projects under the first phase of the Revitalisation Plan will generate about 4,000 jobs.”
The PM also announced a planned 500-acre expansion of the PLIPDECO estate at Point Lisas, along with three other projects nearing approval to commence at PLIPDECO: two in the metals industry and one in food manufacturing. She also said the creation of a 256-acre SEZ to house data centres at Picton, near the UWI South Campus, is also being advanced.
“These projects and others will create thousands of sustainable jobs for the people ... In April, I’d said better days are coming, I now say better days are here and are continuing to get brighter,” the PM added, also noting developments in the business and energy sector.
